At the Southern Nevada Veterans Memorial Cemetery in Boulder City, politicians, veterans and their families came together to celebrate Memorial Day, a day to honor loss.
Politics and Government
Over 70 initiatives are set to receive funding from the county after commissioners voted to award $1.5 million in grants.
He’s the presumptive Republican presidential nominee, but make no mistake, Donald Trump was the headliner at the Libertarian National Convention.
Early voters on Saturday touted the convenience of not having to wait in line Election Day.
Early voting begins Saturday for the June 11 primary. Here’s what you need to know.
The mountains that feed the Colorado River already have seen more snow this winter than they normally would through an entire snow season.
Democratic Rep. Steven Horsford discusses his unlikely path from growing up in Las Vegas to chairing the Congressional Black Caucus, the first Nevadan to head a major group in the House of Representatives.
Superintendents and the state’s charter authority must appear at a meeting within 30 days to detail how they’d use the proposed funding, officials say.
“You don’t have to buy it if you don’t want to drink it,” Lincoln County Commissioner Janine Woodworth said.
A Senate committee unanimously passed a proposed amendment that which would strike language allowing for slavery or involuntary servitude from the state constitution.
The bill, by Senate Majority Leader Nicole Cannizzaro, D-Las Vegas, would codify an executive order put in place last year by then-Gov. Steve Sisolak.
For years, Alamo residents who wanted alcohol simply drove to gas stations and small stores outside the town limits. Then last year the town’s attention turned to self-preservation.
As the Oakland Athletics’ Las Vegas relocation work continues, the team has hired a small army of lobbyists to carry out groundwork with state leaders.
Voters could soon be asked whether references to slavery should be removed from the Nevada Constitution after the Assembly voted to advance a joint resolution Thursday.
In the latest Conservation in the West Poll, low river levels was ranked as the most serious concern by Nevadans, ahead concerns over the rising costs of living and gas prices.